Tips for Handling Summer Bass

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bassman6243

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Tips for Handling Summer Bass
Summer fishing presents some unique conditions that can cause a potentially lethal amount of stress on fish.

Bass tournaments are an important part of the fishing scene, but anglers must take special care to ensure the health and safety of the fish they catch.
During the summer, scorching hot air temperatures elevate water temperatures to create lethal conditions for largemouth bass in a captive environment. Most tournament organizations have strict rules regarding the careful handling of fish, but severe summer weather and hot water conditions are extremely dangerous for fish kept in livewells for several hours before experiencing the trauma of a weigh-in.
Of course, most bass caught during tournaments are released alive, but legitimate concerns have arisen over delayed mortality. A study conducted by the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation has shown that an average 28 percent of bass caught during summer tournaments die within six days of their release. Gene Gilliland, a fisheries biologist with the Wildlife Department, said that most tournament anglers are very conscientious about protecting bass resources, but many are not equipped to deal with potentially dangerous conditions that accompany summer tournament fishing.
"The last thing a tournament angler or tournament director wants is to kill fish," Gilliland said. "That's something they've tried to be very careful about over the years, and for the most part they've been successful, but summer fishing presents some unique conditions that can cause a potentially lethal amount of stress on fish. We can't eliminate those conditions, of course, but we can take certain steps to lessen fish mortality during tournaments."
Most of the damage occurs while fish are held in livewells. On-board livewells are among the most important tools ever devised for reducing tournament bass mortality, but confinement in a livewell can spell a death sentence for bass in the summer. Built into the hulls of most bass boats, livewells consist of a small tank equipped with an aerator to pump air into the water. However, the decks of most boats are covered with dark carpet, which absorbs the heat of direct sunlight. As a boat hull heats up during the day, it can turn a livewell into a makeshift broiler, and the effects worsen with the pounding a boat takes while underway.
To provide more livable conditions for bass confined in a livewell during the summer, Gilliland makes the following recommendations:


•Fill your livewell as soon as you launch your boat and turn on the aerator to build up dissolved oxygen levels.
•Run your aerator continuously, no matter what time of year. Fish confined in livewells use oxygen faster than an aerator can replace it.
•Add ice to the livewell. When water surface temperatures are higher than 85 degrees, adding ice will reduce the water temperature in a livewell by 10 degrees.
•Use block ice if possible. It melts slower than crushed or cubed ice, and it cools water more evenly. One eight-pound block will cool a 30-gallon livewell for about three hours. Carry extra blocks in an ice chest to use later.
•Add non-iodized salt, 1/3-cup per five gallons of livewell capacity, to help reduce stress on fish.
•Re-circulate water through your aerator rather than pump in hot surface water.
•Replace at least half of the livewell water two or three times daily to remove ammonia. Add additional ice and salt, and then resume recirculation.
•Commercial livewell additives help calm fish in livewells, helping reduce stress and decreasing their oxygen respiratory rates.
 
Great post! Thanks for sharing! We need to bump all these types of posts to the top as we head into the hot summer months...
 
If I had a dollar for each of these threads...Ya'll would make me share..LOL!

Great post.
Theres some pretty killer threads on this subject and one sticky in the Conservation/ Education area.
 
<font face="georgia,palatino" size="2">I don't agree with the first statement.<font color="#ff0000"> Do not fill your livewell as soon as you launch your boat. </font><font color="#000000">All the water is filled with gas, oil, and carbon dioxidefrom everyone launching their boat. All ways fill your livewell at the first stop this will be the cleaniest and the coolest water. </font></font></p>

<font face="Georgia" size="2">Fish care should always be a primary concern of anglers. Please read "The Fisherman's Responsibility" by The Bass Federation or "Keeping Bass Alive" by Gene Gilliland and others. Both of these are available on line and are good reading.</font></p>
 
Blocks of ice the live well is a bad idea. Anyone that has rode in a boat across summer time water knows how rough it is. Imagin being in a small box with a block of ice beating the crap out of you. Also, reducing the water temp too low and then releasing the fish will cause thermal shock and kill the fish. I keep bass in the heat of the summer in my Triton with no ice, no additives and during weigh in you cannot keep them in the basket. What is my secret? Deep livewell and I keep the recirculate and fresh water adding on a time. Ammonia burn will also kill a fish quick. To keep fish alive you have to give them fresh water with oxygen. That is it.
 
I agree Wiskers. I have never tried any additives or ice. Once I put the first fish in the livewell I switch the aereator and recirc to auto. They will run for one minute and then shut off for three minutes and run for another minute and so on. I don't have any problems with the livelihood of my fish. My pumps are 500 gph so nothing special there. Just a deep livewell and fresh water and oxygen pumping in on a timer.
 
I have to disagree with Whiskers on this one. I use additives all year long and once the water gets warm I start adding ice or frozen milk jugs with ice to the live well and the fish are super healthy. Why would you want your fish riding around in 90 degree water when you catch them out deep when the water is no where near that warm?
 
sdfd504 - 5/7/2010 1:21 PM I have to disagree with Whiskers on this one. I use additives all year long and once the water gets warm I start adding ice or frozen milk jugs with ice to the live well and the fish are super healthy. Why would you want your fish riding around in 90 degree water when you catch them out deep when the water is no where near that warm?
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I guarantee you they will surrive better in 90 degree water than in 75 degree water with a 10lb block of ice beating them to death as you run 60 mph over 2-3 foot rollers. Bass can live in 90 degree water without any issues so long as the water is fresh and has oxygen. We catch fish out of 3 feet of water in the dead of summerall the time. </p>

If you could cool the water without having loose heave objects in the livewell (such as blocks of ice, 2 liter bottles, etc) I would be in favor of doing it. That being said if you have a boat with a properly designed livewell it is not needed.</p>
 
<font face="georgia,palatino" size="2">There is a product called Koolwell that does a good job of keeping the water cool. It has a thermostat and it's own recirculation pump. It is a good product. </font></p>

<font face="Georgia" size="2">The cooler the water is the more oxygen it can hold and the less likelyhood of delayed mortality after the weigh in. Again, read the two articles that I posted earlier.</font></p>
 
I say throw them on top of the ice that way they have a freasher taste, and really are easier to clean that way. Guy taught me that in Florida, it really works too.
 
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